IN THEATERS (SF) – “The Song of Sway Lake”

Rory Culkin stars in this impressionistic but inconsistent drama as Ollie Sway, a disaffected disc jockey who returns to his family home on Sway Lake following his estranged father’s suicide. Despite skipping the funeral, Ollie determines that it’s his duty to steal a rare 78 record from the house before his grandmother Charlie (Mary Beth Peil) can find and sell the still-sealed heirloom, bringing a handsome but unpredictable Russian friend named Nikolai (Robert Sheehan) along for the ride. As Ollie struggles with the thought that his inherited obsession with musical curation might be the same thing that drove his record collector father to suicide, he also nurses a crush on a purple-haired, jet-skiing girl named Isadora (Isabelle McNally) from the nearby hotel, while Nikolai makes a strange play to become part of the family. The Song of Sway Lake bleeds past, present, dream, memory and fantasy together into a moody and ethereal family drama, and while I can’t say that much of it worked for me beyond the theoretical level, I admired director Ari Gold’s attempt to transcend his Sundance-ready scenario with mythology and montage.

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